“The Police Just F**ked My Life” – Alabamians Outraged As Civil Asset Forfeitures Soar

Tyler Durden's picture

The morning of June 29, 2010, began much like any other day for Frank Ranelli, the owner of FAR Computers in Ensley, Alabama. Ranelli, who had owned his computer repair business just outside of Birmingham for more than two decades, was doing some paperwork in his windowless office when he heard loud banging on the front door.  Within a matter of moments Ranelli was placed under arrest and all of the computer equipment in his store, much of which belonged to customers, had been confiscated by Alabama police never to be returned.  Per AL.com:


Within moments, a Homewood police sergeant had declared a room full of customers’ computers, merchandise and other items “stolen goods,” Ranelli recalled. He ordered his officers to “arrest them all,” according to Ranelli, who was cuffed and taken to the Homewood jail along with two of his shop employees.

 

The police proceeded to confiscate more than 130 computers – most of which were customers’ units waiting to be repaired, though some were for sale – as well as the company’s business servers and workstations and even receipts and checkbooks.

 

“Here I was, a man, owned this business, been coming to work every day like a good old guy for 23 years, and I show up at work that morning – I was in here doing my books from the day before – and the police just f***ed my life,” he said.

Nothing ever came of the case. The single charge levied against Renelli of receiving stolen goods was dismissed after he demonstrated that he had followed proper protocol in purchasing the sole laptop computer he was accused of receiving illegally. That said, despite no official charges and no jury trial, Ranelli has been trying, to no avail, for nearly 7 years now to recover the items the officers took from his business.

Alabama

Rick Hightower had a similar experience with Alabama police when he was a student at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.  After being arrested for “lewd behavior” at a college party in 2008, Hightower says police raided his apartment and confiscated as much as $200,000 worth of musical instruments and other property.  Despite never being charged with stealing the property, Hightower says police have refused to return any of the confiscated items.

 

On April 13, 2008, he was arrested and initially charged with lewd behavior after police said he was caught exposing himself at Samford University in Birmingham, according to court filings. Hightower, who has a fairly extensive rap sheet, was ultimately convicted of indecent exposure and resisting arrest in connection with that incident.

 

Five days after his arrest, officers with the Homewood and UAB police departments raided Hightower’s apartment, executing a warrant to search for files, cameras and any other evidence related to the incident at Samford.

 

They also decided to seize “a large amount of property believed to be stolen,” including “musical instruments, electronics and other items,” according to a UAB Police Department report on the search.

 

As such, Hightower was charged with receiving stolen property. He was never charged with stealing any of the other items that were seized from his apartment, and was not convicted of stealing the English horn, as he provided a receipt that showed that he had purchased the item from a thrift store.

 

And yet the Homewood Police Department – which stored and ostensibly continues to store the items seized in the raid – did not return the horn or any other items to Hightower. More than nine years later, he has yet to even lay eyes on any of the possessions that were taken from him.

Unfortunately, the raids on Ranelli’s business and Hightower’s apartment are not isolated incidents. They are just a couple of many similar cases that have taken place in Alabama and across the U.S. in recent years, according to Joseph Tully, a California criminal lawyer with expertise in civil asset forfeitures.

Long used in major criminal busts as a means to confiscate money and possessions obtained by illegal means, civil asset forfeiture impacts thousands of Americans each year and has become the subject of intense national and local scrutiny over the past decade.

 

The ability of law enforcement agencies to use such tactics to take people’s assets and property almost at will “lends itself to abuse,” Tully, who describes cases like Ranelli’s as “theft,” said.

 

“It’s really hard to fight the system. If it was a private citizen who stole your things, you could go get your things, or in the olden days you could get your shotgun and pay the thief a visit and say, ‘give me my stuff back.’ But you can’t do that in this case because it’s the police.”

 

In fiscal year 2016, law enforcement agencies in Alabama seized more than $2.2 million worth of “assets that represent the proceeds of, or were used to facilitate federal crimes,” according to its annual report to Congress. In fiscal 2014, the total value of such assets seized by law enforcement in the state was more than $4.9 million.

That recent drop is the local manifestation of a nationwide reduction in the use of civil asset forfeiture as public awareness and outcry over its widespread use has grown in recent years, according to experts. The tactic is still regularly deployed, impacting dozens of Alabamians each year. But the tide is turning. Fourteen states, from New Mexico to Connecticut, have passed laws in recent years to stop police from seizing property absent a criminal conviction.

“The pendulum is starting to swing but I wouldn’t say that it has been swinging back the other way for too long,” Tully said. “State and local governments are starting to act … Law enforcement officers are coming around a bit and there’s a little bit of a curb in police doing whatever they want.”

 

And on Tuesday, U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions issued a memo directing a deputy to establish a unit aimed at ensuring there are no abuses of a federal policy reinstated by Sessions in July to help state and local law enforcement agencies seize accused criminals’ property.

 

Alabama’s laws, however, still provide the state’s citizens with few protections from the practices, earning the state a “D- for its civil asset forfeiture laws” in a November 2015 report by the Institute for Justice, a Virginia nonprofit advocacy law firm.

 

Alabama laws stack the deck against victims of asset forfeiture by establishing a “low bar to forfeit” and not requiring a conviction to do so; offering “limited protections for innocent third-party property owners”; and letting “100% of forfeiture proceeds go to law enforcement,” the report stated.

The irony here, of course, is that we live in a country where the police can show up to any “Regular Joe’s” apartment on any given day and legally confiscate all of his stuff but James Comey couldn’t even manage to interview a material witness in the Hillary email investigation without first granting them an immunity deal.  Seems fair…

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10 Comments
CCRider
CCRider
October 21, 2017 8:40 am

Well Alabamians just keep electing statist thugs like Jeff Sessions and Roy Black and learn to love your captivity.

Vote, my ass.

anarchyst
anarchyst
October 21, 2017 9:32 am

When “asset forfeiture” was first being proposed as a “crime fighting tool” to be used in the “war on (some) drugs”, I vigorously protested the use of this blatantly unconstitutional tactic as an assault on constitutional principles.
My friends and associates immediately lambasted me for my views, calling me “soft on crime” in the “war on (some) drugs”, despite my prescience in predicting EXACTLY the scenario we presently live under…
Now, “the chickens have indeed come home to roost”. American “law enforcement” (I use that term loosely) has become no better than bands of “highwaymen” (criminals “under color of authority”).
Most people are unaware that a perverse incentive exists within this abuse of authority. Most jurisdictions reduce the budgets of their police departments by the amounts secured (actually stolen) under their asset forfeiture programs.
It is long overdue to end this abuse…

James
James
  anarchyst
October 21, 2017 9:47 am

Tis very clear,law enforcement will fill their budgets and pensions with stolen monies.The people need to either vote all this out and if successful as times get harder will be a lot of folks with nothing to lose/everything to gain,at that point would be a bad time to be a cop as folks will look at you as a enemy that stole their families livelyhood.

Ammo
Ammo
October 21, 2017 11:33 am

Can you imagine the booty law enforcement would get from seized assets if they would arrest the Clintons, Weinstein, Obama, Feinstein, Pelosi, Weiner, Soros, Ryan, Reed, McConnel, and the rest of the political elites that make laws for the citizenry, but clearly exempting themselves and Hollywood perverts? Though I can’s stand the thugs of the NFL and no longer watch the display of hypocrisy, I’m going to have to take a knee on this one…..unless they promise to arrest Rep Frederica Wilson just to seize all her clown costumes………pretty pretty please.

Anonymous
Anonymous
October 21, 2017 11:37 am

Civil asset forfeiture laws were made to seize illegally acquired assets from powerful and ultra rich crime syndicates to keep them from having unlimited numbers of lawyers that were able to block (and bribe) prosecutors from successfully prosecuting them.

Drug kingpins, Mafia bosses, international gangster organizations and such.

I wonder if those laws have ever actually been used on anyone that way, and how often they actually are if they have?

(FWIW, RICO laws had the same intentions, but have been used more often as political tools to destroy political opponents of leftist organizations than to go after major crime organizations)

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
October 21, 2017 4:09 pm

“Unfortunately, the raids on Ranelli’s business and Hightower’s apartment are not isolated incidents. They are just a couple of many similar cases that have taken place in Alabama and across the U.S. in recent years, ”

So 2010 and 2008 are considered “recent”? I guess that’s understandable for Alabama. Given the title of the article I’m amazed that the author couldn’t cite a dozen or more Alabama CAF cases from the last two years. Not that I’m defending the practice but surely some more recent cases, not involving scumbags on the take, could be cited right?

Anonymous
Anonymous
  IndenturedServant
October 21, 2017 6:09 pm

They’re an ongoing and current problem, that’s what I took the statement to mean.

Subwo
Subwo
October 21, 2017 4:25 pm

I saw this back in the late 1990s. The county sheriff’s department would figure (budget) $30,000 of CAF would be taken in to use on their Santa Cops program to give gifts to poor kids. Everyone felt great as this was thought of as a good use of the money taken in. But I pointed out that all money being fungible it just allowed the department use money taken without a crime being charged and allowed them to use the same amount of money in their budget for other spending. As our county population has grown I’m sure the CAF has likewise.

Vodka
Vodka
October 21, 2017 5:43 pm

Reagan got the drug asset forfeiture laws passed by using the extreme example of the Miami drug kingpins and their million dollar yachts and stacks of cash. It sounded reasonable to me at the time. But then, as I start my Junior year of college in ’86, a classmate gets a $15k inheritance check from a grandparent’s death (if I remember correctly). He cashes the check, heads to a car-lot to buy a pretty decent used Camaro, then buys 8 ounces of weed on his way back to campus.

Long story short: he gets pulled over, searched, and busted. Turns out that those brand new drug asset forfeiture laws for “drug kingpins” apply to him. They took the Camaro, $5k cash he had on him, and of course the weed.

Was he a stupid 20 year old? Yes. Did he deserve that? No fucking way.

Iconoclast421
Iconoclast421
October 21, 2017 6:32 pm

This is why I will never open a business. I would take revenge on those fucks and I wouldnt care what it cost me.